The quantity of power consumed by a light bulb is dependant on the wattage of the bulb.
Anything that uses electricity. For example, a light-bulb.
Some of the earliest uses of electricity in history include the invention of the electric battery by Alessandro Volta in 1800, the development of the electric telegraph by Samuel Morse in the 1830s, and the creation of the first electric light bulb by Thomas Edison in 1879. These innovations paved the way for the widespread adoption of electricity in various industries and everyday life.
It doesn't, an electric car uses electricity
Yes, a light bulb is a piece of technology that uses electricity to produce light. It consists of a filament inside a glass bulb that emits light when an electric current passes through it.
A light bulb typically uses electrical energy to produce light. The electrical energy is converted into heat and light energy by the filament inside the bulb.
The amount of electricity a plugged-in lamp uses depends on its wattage. A typical 60-watt bulb, if left on for one hour, uses 0.06 kilowatt-hours of electricity.
A resistor is really anything that uses electricity along an electric circuit, for example a light bulb, a computer, a radio, etc.
A light bulb uses energy. It uses electricity.
Any electrical device "raises your electric bill", but only when it is activated. (only when you turn on the switch) A 100 watt bulb, left on for 10 hours uses 1 KW-hr. A 10 watt bulb left on for 100 hours uses 1 KW-hr. It becomes relatively simple to understand that if the power company charges you a set price (for example $0.15/KW-Hr) the 10 watt bulb would raise your electric bill much more slowly than would the 100 watt bulb.
No. The term SOURCE means that it is a supply of electrical energy, and a light bulb does not supply electricity, it uses it. A battery, generator, fuel cell, or solar cell would be a source.
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That depends on the type of bulb AND on it's power usage. An old incandescent bulb of 100 watts uses about an amp, a 60 watt uses about a half amp. But a florescent bulb putting out the same light would consume about half the current, and a LED bulb would use less than half that.